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Overthink Meter — How (and why) do you overthink?

You don't just overthink — you do it in a specific way. Which?

  • 3 min
  • 16 questions
  • No signup
  • Free
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Full result at the end — no email needed

Possible results · which one are you?

  • Spiraller
  • Analyst
  • Worrier
  • Catastrophizer
Overthink Meter test — cover illustration

Quick answer

You don't just overthink — you do it in a specific way. Which?

  • 16 questions · ~3 min
  • Cost: free · no signup

About this test

A 16-item self-report quiz that maps you to one of four overthinking patterns drawn from research on rumination (Nolen-Hoeksema 1991), worry (GAD-7) and decisional procrastination. Four items per pattern on a 5-point Likert scale. The point isn't to label you anxious — it's to identify which loop your brain runs so you can interrupt the right one.

Methodology

16 self-report items (4 per overthinking pattern) on a 5-point Likert scale. Inspired by published constructs of rumination (Nolen-Hoeksema 1991), worry, and decisional procrastination. Not a clinical instrument.

Possible archetypes

Spiraller · Chronic 3am replayer
It's 3am and you're replaying that thing you said in 2019. Iconic.
Analyst · Excel for pizza
You've had 14 tabs open about a decision since Tuesday. Pick already.
Worrier · "Ok." with a period
They sent "ok." with a period. You've been spiraling for two hours. Same.
Catastrophizer · Pre-grieve mode
You've already attended your own funeral about a headache. We see you.

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Related reading

By Ramon CurtoEditorial review TEST-YO! EditorialUpdated
FAQ + disclaimer
Is "overthinking" a real psychological concept?

There are real published constructs (rumination, worry, decisional procrastination) but "overthinker type" itself is a popular framing. The four patterns synthesise those constructs into something memorable.

How is it scored?

Four items per pattern on a 5-point Likert scale. The highest-scoring of the four is reported as your dominant overthinking style.

How long does it take?

About 3 minutes — 16 short statements.